Heron Posted June 9, 2015 Posted June 9, 2015 When fishing a worm (any worm 6"+), when would you use one of these rigs over the other? Quote
Super User Sam Posted June 9, 2015 Super User Posted June 9, 2015 Shaky head in shallow water and in the grass lines when the fishing gets tough or you just want to give it a shot. Texas rigged worm all the time in all conditions and depths. 6 Quote
onetime Posted June 9, 2015 Posted June 9, 2015 Sam, on 09 Jun 2015 - 4:06 PM, said: Shaky head in shallow water and in the grass lines when the fishing gets tough or you just want to give it a shot. Texas rigged worm all the time in all conditions and depths. This Quote
Heron Posted June 9, 2015 Author Posted June 9, 2015 Shaky head in shallow water and in the grass lines when the fishing gets tough or you just want to give it a shot. Texas rigged worm all the time in all conditions and depths. Ok....How shallow? Why no shaky head in deeper water? Quote
Super User Raul Posted June 9, 2015 Super User Posted June 9, 2015 Why no shaky head in deeper water?Cuz he don't like it. 1 Quote
Ozark_Basser Posted June 9, 2015 Posted June 9, 2015 Shaky head for when you want the worm to stand up. Texas rig in cover. Quote
Super User Raul Posted June 9, 2015 Super User Posted June 9, 2015 Splendid Whenever I see all these "rules" I wonder who made them, because I've been bass fishing for more than 3 decades and the first rule I learned is that there are no rules, so, when do I fish a shakeyhead ? Whenever I can, when I want the bait to stand up, where I can do it. A shakeyhead is not the most clever selection when you have to fish through cover, the bait will hang up or trap gunk, or to fish chunk rockpiles, the bait can and will hang up in the crevices and cracks so, it's not a matter of depth, it's a matter of cleverness of application. Whenever you want to fish a shakeyhead you can do it if you can do it, sometimes you will have to fish a t-rig simply because it goes through where the shakeyhead will hang up. Quote
Heron Posted June 9, 2015 Author Posted June 9, 2015 Shaky head for when you want the worm to stand up. Texas rig in cover. If so, then why so many shaky heads out there that dont seem to be designed for standing up? 1 Quote
Heron Posted June 9, 2015 Author Posted June 9, 2015 ...sometimes you will have to fish a t-rig simply because it goes through where the shakeyhead will hang up. Agreed I find the is to be especially true when fishing from shore. Quote
Arv Posted June 9, 2015 Posted June 9, 2015 I fish both often and don't really know what makes me decide to be honest. I see if one or the other works. I don't throw any large plastics on a shakey head, but I will throw things like 6-7'' worms, tubes, flukes, and craws on both. Again, if one is working, great, if not, then I'll try the other. Quote
Super User OkobojiEagle Posted June 10, 2015 Super User Posted June 10, 2015 I've been fishing jig-worms for decades, even before they were called shakey heads. I tried a slip sinker Texas rig once, but didn't like the absence of feel involved with it. My answer... you can fish a jig-worm, uh, shakey head anywhere you can fish a T-rigged worm. oe Quote
FloridaBasser1 Posted June 10, 2015 Posted June 10, 2015 I like the shakey head method for bendy(lot of action) strait tail worms or finesse worms. I like the T rig for Senkos, and ribbon tail worms Quote
Ozark_Basser Posted June 10, 2015 Posted June 10, 2015 If so, then why so many shaky heads out there that dont seem to be designed for standing up? I guess that's true, but I won't buy shakey heads that won't stand up. Quote
Ozark_Basser Posted June 10, 2015 Posted June 10, 2015 If so, then why so many shaky heads out there that dont seem to be designed for standing up? I guess that's true, but I won't buy shakey heads that won't stand up. Quote
Super User WRB Posted June 10, 2015 Super User Posted June 10, 2015 Doodling was the forerunner of the shaky jig worm presentation. Before it was called anything Rip Nunnery caught a bass limit of 97 lbs at Ray Scott's All American bass tournament "shaking" a plastic worm, era 1968. Don Iovino revived this presentation shaking brass & glass and called doodling. I prefer doodling a T-rigged brass & glass worm, works better for me and prefer using a baitcasting outfit. Tom Quote
Super User OkobojiEagle Posted June 10, 2015 Super User Posted June 10, 2015 In the majority of my current reading, "shakey head" seems to be more about the tackle than the technique. (As is Brewer's slider fishing)... oe Quote
Super User Choporoz Posted June 10, 2015 Super User Posted June 10, 2015 If so, then why so many shaky heads out there that dont seem to be designed for standing up? Most manufacturers didn't ask Bobby U for help, I guess. Quote
Super User Catt Posted June 10, 2015 Super User Posted June 10, 2015 Rip Nunnery catch 15 bass that weighed 98-15 & it was not a shaky technique! http://www.bassmaster.com/news/worlds-greatest-fishing-hole Quote
kikstand454 Posted June 10, 2015 Posted June 10, 2015 Yeah^^^^^ that's two different things. I fish a shaky head whenever I physically can and not spend the entire time hung up. If its too snaggy, I got to a t-rig. If they were biting the shaky head, but they're not hitting the t-rig. .... then I t-rig an elaztech worm and have a weedless shakeyhead. Quote
Super User WRB Posted June 10, 2015 Super User Posted June 10, 2015 Rip Nunnery catch 15 bass that weighed 98-15 & it was not a shaky technique! http://www.bassmaster.com/news/worlds-greatest-fishing-hole Catt, I knew Rip and fished with him on several occasions and can tell you what his technique was;Shaking the worm on slack line by holding the rod tip high, then lowering the rod watching for line movement, then reeling in slack line and hook setting as the bass swam away with his worm. His shaking was whipping the rod tip about 1-2 feet back and forth, very bazaar technique! Tom Quote
Super User Catt Posted June 10, 2015 Super User Posted June 10, 2015 Yelp & he was pair with Gerald Blanchard who put them on the fish & who is married to my cousin! Quote
Super User Catt Posted June 10, 2015 Super User Posted June 10, 2015 Here's the technique & lures used, which was not a texas rig or shaky head but a modified football jig with a skirt, spinner bait blade, & tiny piece of a worm for a trailer. http://bassfishingarchives.com/western/twig-pigs-and-bush-hogs-more-rip-nunnery#more-3969 Quote
Super User RoLo Posted June 10, 2015 Super User Posted June 10, 2015 The question sounds a little odd to me, but I guess it depends on your concept of a T-rig I've been T-rigging plastics before the concept had a name, when it was simply called "self-weedless", and that pretty much describes every shaky head. Roger Quote
Super User Raul Posted June 10, 2015 Super User Posted June 10, 2015 The question sounds a little odd to me, but I guess it depends on your concept of T-rig I was Texas-rigging plastics before the concept had a name, when it was simply called "self-weedless", which pretty much describes every shaky head. Roger Yup, like I was shakey heading way before shakey heading got it´s shakey christening, I always liked the jighead rig but regular ordinary retail jigheads in smaller weights ( like 1/16 oz ) had these itsy bitsy teeny tiny hooks and I couldn´t just rig a 6"+ inch worms on them until I had this epiphany: "what if I get a mold and ............ ", voilá, suddenly I was able to fish worms and other baits the way I wanted with the combination of weight and hook size I wanted. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.